DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 5.26 MB)
Which Beracha Does One Recite Over Garlic?

In the times of the Talmud, people customarily ate garlic raw, without first cooking or grilling it. And so the Gemara establishes that if one eats raw garlic, he recites the ordinary Beracha of "Boreh Peri Ha’adama," whereas if one eats cooked garlic, the garlic is "downgraded" to the Beracha of "She’ha’kol," since cooking garlic was seen as having a detrimental effect on its taste. (Tosafot explain that although cooked garlic is often flavorful, this is due to the ingredients with which it is cooked, but intrinsically, cooking has an adverse effect on the taste.)

The Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan, 1839-1933) noted (in Siman 203), however, that people in modern times do not generally eat hard, sharp garlic without first cooking it. Therefore, he writes, nowadays, one who eats raw garlic would recite "She’ha’kol," since he is eating the garlic in an unusual manner. This was also the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef.

As for cooked garlic, the Shulhan Aruch follows the Gemara’s ruling, that one recites "She’ha’kol" due to the detrimental effect of cooking on garlic, and this ruling is cited also by Yalkut Yosef from the Kaf Ha’haim (Rav Yaakob Haim Sofer, Baghdad-Jerusalem, 1870-1939). However, the Mishna Berura, as mentioned, established that a food’s status depends on the conventional eating habits of every time and place. This principle should, presumably, affect the status of cooked garlic, just as it affects the status of raw garlic. Today, it is clear that people enjoy cooked garlic, and in fact it is often served as a popular delicacy in hotels and at affairs. Stores even sell readymade cooked garlic, and it is also common for people to grill garlic on a barbeque. Therefore, as this has become the normal way of eating garlic, it would stand to reason that nowadays, the Beracha over cooked garlic would be "Boreh Peri Ha’adama."

Summary: Nowadays, when garlic is commonly eaten cooked or grilled, and is generally not eaten raw, one who eats cooked garlic recites the Beracha of "Boreh Peri Ha’adama," and one who eats raw garlic recites the Beracha of "She’ha’kol."

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Beracha Over Puffed Wheat and Granola Bars
Situations When One Does Not Recite a Beracha Before Drinking Water
Does One Recite “Ha’mosi” over Sweet Bread, or over So-Called “Mezonot Rolls”?
What Beracha Does One Recite on Pita Chips?
Which Beracha Does One Recite Over Pizza or Calzone?
What Must the Third Person Eat for Three People to Make a Zimun?
Reciting a Zimun if a Third Person Arrives After the First Two Finished Eating
Making a Zimun in a Moving Vehicle, Boat or Plane
Zimun If Ten People Ate Together But Not All of Them Ate Bread
Insight Into the Text of the Zimun
Can Three People Make a Zimun if One of Them Did Not Eat Bread?
Can a Minor be Counted Toward a Zimun?
Zimun in a Yeshiva Cafeteria
The Beracha Recited Over Chocolate Bars with Nuts, and Over Coated Almonds
Berachot If One Falls Asleep During A Meal
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found